Appellants were convicted of first degree murder while armed, D.C.Code §§ 22-2401, 3202 (1981), and killing in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise (CCE), 21 U.S.C. § 848(e)(1)(A) (1994). They contend that the imposition of cumulative sentences for these two offenses is improper because the .federal murder convictions merge with the D.C.Code convictions. We affirm.
I.
• Appellants belong to the so-called Fern Street Crew, an organization which distributed crack cocaine for seven years in the District of Columbia and Maryland. The Crew’s activities were facilitated by its use of violence to defend territory from rival drug dealers and subvert the efforts of the criminal justice system. Following a four month trial, appellants were convicted of numerous offenses, including murder, armed robbery, kidnapping, and drug and RICO conspiracies; each was given multiple life sentences and other assorted prison terms. Appellants bring numerous challenges to their convictions, only one of which merits discussion. 1 They contend it was an error of law for the district court to sentence them to two life terms for the same killing, one sentence for violation of the federal CCE murder statute and the other for violation of the District’s first degree murder statute. 2 They argue that in the absence of clear legislative intent, defendants may not receive multiple punishments for the same act under federal and D.C. statutory schemes. Such sentences, they claim, run afoul of the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against double jeopardy.
II.
While literally proscribing successive prosecutions for the same offense, the Double Jeopardy Clause also has been interpreted-to bar the imposition , of multiple punishments for the same offense.
Albernaz v. United States,
In this ease, appellants concede that the CCE murder offense and the District’s first degree murder offense each requires an element not included in the other.
3
They claim, however, that the
Blockburger
test in this instance should begin but not end the analysis. They point to a line of our cases from the 1970s which suggests that even though a District offense and a federal offense may, under
Blockburger,
“require different elements- of proof, there must still be a determination that Congress intended the provisions to bear separate punishments when applied to a single act or transaction.”
United States v. Canty,
To be sure, support exists in prior case law, at least, in
dicta,
for appellants’ contention. They rely on two notions to support their argument that we must go beyond
Blockburger
in assessing whether multiple punishments may be imposed in cases where a defendant commits a federal crime and a District crime in the same transaction. Appellants first point to the general proposition that “in the absence of plain legislative intention ‘doubt will be resolved against turning a single transaction into multiple offenses.’”
United States v. Knight,
We have also expressed concern about a more specific issue: the fairness of multiple punishments in the context of D.C.Code § 11-502(3)(1981), which authorizes the United States Attorney to combine in one indictment, triable in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, criminal violations of both federal and District law. This provision places District defendants in the unique position of being tried under two statutory schemes at the same time; although the United States Constitution does not bar a defendant in any
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one of the 50 states from being charged and punished under federal law and state law for the same conduct,
see, e.g., Bartkus v. Illinois,
Because District residents live under only one sovereign while most Americans live under two, current double jeopardy jurisprudence guarantees that some inconsistency will exist between the treatment of defendants in the District and their counterparts in the 50 states. While District defendants suffer to the extent that they are far more likely to be charged, convicted, and punished under two different statutory schemes, they also benefit in important respects. A person acquitted of a crime under District law may not be charged with that same crime under federal law in a successive prosecution (or vice versa); the same sovereign may not take a second bite at the apple.
See, e.g., United States v. Shepard,
To take appellants’ approach would exacerbate an aspect of inequality that already works in favor of District defendants. Under the rule they urge, District defendants could not be given cumulative sentences for a federal offense and a District offense committed in a single transaction absent some clear indication of congressional intent, even if these distinct offenses satisfy Blockburger. But since a federal offense and a state offense do not even have to pass the Blockbur-ger test in order for multiple sentences to be imposed, the addition of a more searching examination of legislative intent in the case of District defendants would only heighten the degree of the disparate treatment.
We do not believe that such an outcome is mandated by precedent. Appellants rely on eases that do not speak precisely to the issue at hand. In
United States v. Spears,
In
United States v. Canty,
Applying the principle of
Canty
in
United States v. Knight,
we considered the hierarchy of penalties imposed by the mail robbery statute. Under 18 U.S.C. § 2114 (1970), an offender could receive a maximum of 10 years for mail robbery or assault of a mail custodian with intent to rob and 25 years for putting a mail custodian’s life in jeopardy during.such a robbery by the use of a dangerous weapon. In
Knight,
appellants had been convicted of mail robbery and robbery while armed under D.C.Code § 22-2901 (1967). Examining the mail robbery statute, we concluded that Congress had “deliberately addressed itself to the distinction between simple mail robbery and the case where a dangerous weapon is involved, and ... provided an increase of punishment
only
if the use of the dangerous weapon puts the life of the mail custodian in jeopardy.”
Knight,
While delineating coherent principles from this line of cases may not be easy, we think it is clear that appellants’ sentences are not implicated. We have concluded that a defendant may not be sentenced under both federal and District statutory schemes only in cases “where the federal offense and local offense are identical or one would be a lesser included offense of the other.”
Jones,
With the exception of the sentencing mergers conceded by the government, appellants’ convictions are hereby affirmed.
Notes
. We have fully considered all other arguments advanced by appellants and are satisfied that the district court’s judgments should stand with the following exceptions. The government concedes that appellant Smith, under District law, cannot stand convicted of both first degree murder (premeditated) while armed and first degree murder (felony murder) while armed with respect to the same killing.
See Byrd v. United States,
. Appellant Sumler was convicted of one count of premeditated first degree murder while armed and one count of CCE murder for the killing of Anthony Hinton. Appellants Jefferson and Smith were convicted of two counts of first degree felony murder while armed and two counts .of CCE murder for the killings of Marcus Murray and Victor Hartnett. Appellant Smith was also convicted of one count of premeditated first degree murder and one count of CCE murder for the killing of Ucal Riley (Smith's additional conviction for felony murder regarding the Riley killing was vacated earlier in the opinion. See supra note 1.)
. To prove a CCE murder violation, the government must establish the existence of a continuing criminal enterprise, an element not required by either the premeditated murder or felony murder variation of the District's statute. Conversely, the District's felony murder statute requires that the killing occur during the perpetration of a specified felony, an element not included in the CCE murder offense. And the District's premeditated murder statute requires proof of premeditation, an element not necessary to establishing a CCE murder violation.
. A defendant may be tried and punished under state law then federal law in any of the 50 states.
See Bartkus,
